More taxes for Canadians in 2014 Ontario budget

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation (CTF) is hoping Canadians pick up a copy of a newly released book along with their tax forms this tax season.

The top 1% of taxpayers pay 20% of all income taxes in Canada; the top 6% pay 46% of all income taxes. These are just a few of the facts from the newly released book,Tax Me I’m Canadian! – A Taxpayer’s Guide to Your Money and How Politicians Spend It, authored by Mark Milke and published by Thomas & Black.

“Despite what some tax-and-spend advocates claim, Canadians are not ‘undertaxed,’” notes Mark Milke in the new and revised edition of Tax Me I’m Canadian! “Despite some reductions in taxes in the late 1990s and early 2000s – though with reversals in many Canadian provinces ever since, Canadians are still taxed highly relative to the OECD average and compared with Canada’s own history.”

Milke notes that as a percentage of the economy, tax receipts to governments across Canada were lower in many of the Pierre Trudeau years when compared with today.

In Tax Me I’m Canadian! A Taxpayer’s Guide to Your Money and How Politicians Spend It, Mark Milke covers everything from Canada’s first taxes to the “Freemen” myth that income taxes are unconstitutional to the debate over taxes and civilization.

The book also shows how citizens in Switzerland have achieved a useful balance on questions of taxes, public spending and debt – in part because the Swiss are involved in voting on government policy in regular referendums

– something Milke writes would be useful in Canadian debates over the “proper” tax burden.

• In the most recent tax year chronicled in the book, 24.8 million Canadians filed a tax return and about one-third, over 8.4 million, paid no tax at all.

• The top 1% of taxpayers paid 20% of all income taxes.

• Those who earn under $50,000 constitute 73% of all taxpayers and pay 17% of the income tax burden.

• The first known tax in Canada? On beaver and moose pelts, in 1650, in then New France, now Quebec

• The first provincial sales tax in Canada? In Alberta, in 193The first income tax in Canada? In British Columbia in 1876

• In Switzerland, taxes were 34.7% of GDP in 2013; in Canada, the equivalent figure was 37.9% – yet no one thinks the Swiss are less civilized because of a lower tax burden

• The Swiss also possess a “debt brake” that forces politicians to not endanger future generations with excessive government debt.